Saturday, September 18, 2010

Although I can't say this about that many men, Doug was one of the few men I woke up with every morning. Of course he may not remember those mornings as well as I do, as he was on TV, and I was putting my make up on, watching him; amused by his gentle calming voice at 5am. He was a real man. He talked about his kids, his wife and he brought me the news in a voice that I learned to trust and value.

They fired Doug for his comments about the oil spill? Guess what WJLA?

I appreciate and value your opinion, however, let me get this straight. You're concerned that Christine is a 'nut'? I'm afraid that there are more than a few people who might argue THIS man is a 'nut'.

The architects of this "Wave" building in Denmark describe it as resembling waves during the day, and mountains in the evenings. Me? I think it looks like a camel caught in quick-sand, with only its two humps poking through

It looks to us as though the left is applying Saul Alinsky’s Rule 13 to Christine O’Donnell: “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.” It may or may not work–but even if it does, it leaves other GOP senate candidates unfrozen, depersonalized and unpolarized. Wouldn’t it be something if Delaware’s Chris Coons ended up being the only freshman Democrat in the next Senate?

ScienceDaily (Sep. 18, 2010) — For the first time in more than ten years, there has been a confirmed sighting of one of the rarest and most mysterious animals in the world, the saola of Laos and Vietnam. The Government of the Lao People's Democratic Republic (also known as Laos) announced on September15 that in late August villagers in the central province of Bolikhamxay captured a saola and brought it back to their village. The animal died several days later, but was photographed while still alive.